Chapter 6
Author: Eddy best
last update2026-01-27 22:29:35

The Measure of Fire

Commander Arel did not believe in legends.

Legends were what frightened people clung to when they lacked facts. Steel, numbers, preparation—those were real. Fire could be measured. Blood could be studied.

That was why he stood over the map instead of the shrine.

“The reports agree,” Arel said. “The subject is young. Untrained. Reactive.”

One of the knights shifted uneasily. “He burned six men and walked away.”

“Yes,” Arel replied calmly. “And collapsed afterward. That matters.”

He tapped the map. “Dragon blood doesn’t make gods. It makes unstable vessels.”

The tent flap stirred as a runner entered. “Commander. We found the witch’s trail.”

Arel nodded. “Good. Set the snare.”

Kael felt it before he saw it.

The heat inside him stirred—not violently, but sharp, alert. Like a hand tightening around his heart.

“Stop,” he said.

The witch halted beside him. “You feel it too.”

“Yes.”

The road ahead looked empty. Too empty. No birds. No insects. The air smelled faintly of oil.

“A trap,” Kael said.

“Yes,” the witch replied. “A careful one.”

Kael closed his eyes and breathed. He focused on keeping the heat low, contained. No fire. Not yet.

They stepped forward.

The ground gave way.

Chains snapped tight around Kael’s legs, dragging him down hard. Runes flared along the metal, burning cold instead of hot. The heat inside him recoiled, pressed down, restrained.

Kael shouted as pain ripped through him—not physical, but deep, like something had its hands around his lungs.

“Kael!” the witch cried.

Arrows struck the ground around her. Soldiers emerged from the rocks, shields raised, weapons ready.

Arel stepped forward, helmet under his arm.

“Careful,” he said. “Don’t provoke him.”

Kael strained against the chains. Fire flared uselessly, smothered by the runes.

“You planned this,” Kael snarled.

“Yes,” Arel said. “Because you’re learning. And learning things must be stopped early.”

The witch raised her hands slowly. “He’s not a weapon.”

Arel looked at her. “Neither is a wildfire. Until it is.”

He turned back to Kael. “You’ve been measured. You burn too fast. You cost too much.”

Kael laughed bitterly. “Then kill me.”

Arel shook his head. “No. We’re going to see how long you last without the fire.”

The chains tightened.

Kael screamed.

Inside him, something ancient stirred—not anger this time, but hunger.

And for the first time since the forest, the dragon spoke again.

Break the rule.

Kael clenched his teeth.

“No,” he whispered.

The pain worsened.

Then break yourself.

Kael looked up at Arel, at the soldiers, at the witch struggling against the archers’ aim.

He made his choice.

The heat surged—not outward, but inward—burning through restraint, through flesh, through fear.

The chains began to glow.

Arel’s calm finally broke. “Shields up!”

Kael screamed as fire tore free.

Not wild.

Focused.

Kael’s body strained against the chains, each link digging into his skin. The cold runes burned in a different way than fire—ice biting at his veins, holding back the heat he wanted to unleash. He gritted his teeth, fighting the urge to let the dragon surge, to melt everything around him. It felt wrong, like breaking a rule he didn’t fully understand, but the instinct was irresistible.

The soldiers shifted nervously. Their captain barked orders, but Kael noticed the hesitation in their movements. Even with superior numbers, fear had taken root. The first arrow landed harmlessly, skewed by an invisible current that distorted the air around him. Kael frowned. The dragon inside wasn’t just power—it was awareness, guiding him, testing him.

He remembered the witch’s warning. Power comes with a cost. Control comes later. Control. A laugh bubbled up from deep inside. He wasn’t in control yet. He wasn’t even close. But the fire in his veins whispered that this was a start, and that start burned hotter than anything he’d ever known.

Arel’s calm voice cut through the tension. “Chains hold him now. What happens when they fail?” He looked at his soldiers with a slight smile, confident in his preparation. “What happens when the dragon within awakens fully?”

Kael’s eyes narrowed. He flexed his fingers. The heat pushed, pressing outward. The chains rattled. Small sparks flew where the runes touched the metal. Soldiers flinched.

Break them, the dragon whispered.

“No,” Kael muttered, jaw tight. Not yet. He didn’t want this. Not like this. But the chains burned, and the fire inside him refused to stay caged. A single deep breath, and the heat flared, coiling like a living thing inside his chest. The chains strained, then cracked in a shower of sparks.

Arel’s smile faltered. Soldiers screamed and ducked, but Kael wasn’t done. Heat rolled across his body, but he held it tight, focused on the chains, not them. He wanted control, not chaos.

The chains snapped completely, clattering to the ground. Kael stood free. His chest heaved. He didn’t shout. He didn’t burn. He simply walked toward them, the fire in his veins still restrained, pulsing like a heartbeat.

The soldiers froze. Their confidence shattered. Arel’s hand twitched toward his weapon. Kael stopped a few meters away, calm now, unnervingly calm.

“You measured me,” Kael said quietly. “You wanted to see how far I could go.”

Arel’s jaw tightened. “I wanted to see if you were a tool or a threat.”

Kael looked down at the chains, then back at the soldiers. “I’m neither,” he said. “I’m what happens when you make mistakes.”

The witch’s words echoed in his head. Every time you draw on it, you burn part of yourself. He could feel it now. Pain, exhaustion, but also clarity. Control wasn’t instinct—it was effort, learning.

And Kael was ready to learn.

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